
WA to host space communications
station
October 15 2020
An optical communications station
capable of receiving high-speed data transmissions from
space is set to be built in Western Australia and will
be installed by The University of Western Australia.
The advanced communications ground
station will be able to receive data from spacecraft
anywhere between LEO and the surface of the Moon. It has
the potential to support ground-breaking space projects,
including NASA’s Artemis mission to land the first woman
and next man on the Moon by 2024.
This is a joint initiative of UWA’s
Astrophotonics Group, which is part of the International
Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), as well as
the ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum
Systems (EQUS) and UK industry partner Goonhilly Earth
Station.
The ground station was launched to
coincide with the International Astronautical Congress.
It will be part of a larger Australasian optical ground
station network, led by the Australian National
University, and with partners in South Australia, and
New Zealand.
The station will use make use of a
0.7 meter observatory-grade optical telescope donated to
ICRAR by Perth local Colin Eldridge. It will be fitted
with advanced atmospheric-noise suppression technology
developed at UWA.
The station will be connected to
Goonhilly’s supercomputer data centre in Cornwall via
high-speed fiber. Goonhilly handles data traffic and
supports secure communications links for the world’s
major satellite operators, including Intelsat, Eutelsat
and SES Satellites. The company is also a partner in the
European Space Agency’s Lunar Pathfinder Mission, which
is scheduled to launch in 2022.
The $535,000 station is expected to
be ‘on-sky’ in early 2021 and open for business later
that year.
Astrophotonics Group leader Dr.
Sascha Schediwy from The University of Western Australia
and ICRAR said optical communications was an emerging
technology expected to revolutionize data transfer from
space. He said, “Most current space communications rely
on radio waves—it’s the same technology that brought us
the voice of Neil Armstrong when the Apollo 11 mission
landed on the Moon in 1969. Free-space optical laser
communications has several advantages over radio,
including significantly faster data rates and hack-proof
data transfer. It’s the next-generation of space
communications, and it’s likely to be how we’ll see high
definition footage of the first woman to walk on the
Moon.” He noted that WA’s ground station would help
launch Australia’s space communications capacity,
stating, “This will cement Australia’s position as a
leader in optical data transmission, and position the
nation to tap into the multi-billion-dollar space
communications market.”
EQUS Director, Professor Andrew
White, said the project, which could be the first
‘on-sky’ optical communications ground station in the
Southern Hemisphere, was a prime example of fundamental
research delivering real-world outcomes. He said, “EQUS
delivers major impacts by encouraging and enabling our
people to translate their research into tangible
technologies and applications. We are building a culture
of innovation, translation and commercialization among
quantum science researchers in Australia. In addition to
space communications, the ground station could also be
used for applications ranging from cutting-edge
fundamental physics to precision earth science and
resource geophysics.”
Professor White added that the
ground station would contribute to the development of
the ‘quantum internet’—secure global data transmission
using quantum-key distribution via optical links to
quantum satellites and would stand as an example of
cutting-edge science partnering with forward-looking
businesses and delivering impacts for both.
Goonhilly Chief Executive Ian Jones
said he was delighted to join forces with UWA, ICRAR and
EQUS to establish an optical communications satellite
ground station in Western Australia. He said, “We’ve
been at the forefront of satellite communications since
the start of the space age, and this is driving it into
the next generation of systems and technologies to
support the enormous data volumes emanating from space
missions. This data arises from science and other
missions and, in the future, will come from Lunar and
Mars missions that involve remote operations, robotics
and AI. We’re proud to be joint trailblazers in the
practical implementation of coherent optical
communications.”
UWA’s Astrophotonics Group Focused
on designing, building, and testing advanced photonic
systems with applications in radio astronomy, optical
astronomy, and space science, the group’s core
technological capability is the long-distance transfer
of stabilized optical-frequency and microwave-frequency
signals across optical fibre networks and free-space
laser links.
ARC Centre of Excellence for
Engineered Quantum Systems (EQUS) mission is to engineer
the quantum future by building quantum machines that
harness the quantum world for practical applications.
Goonhilly is a private UK-based
company comprised of highly skilled professionals and
experienced satellite communications engineers who have
been involved in many of the innovations in satellite
communications and space science in the past 30 years.
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